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Oracle SOA Suite 11g Performance Tuning Cookbook

You're reading from   Oracle SOA Suite 11g Performance Tuning Cookbook Featuring over 100 recipes, this handy cookbook will walk you through the different ways to optimize the performance of the Oracle SOA Suite 11g. Essential reading for administrators, developers, and architects.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849688840
Length 328 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Oracle SOA Suite Performance Tuning Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Identifying Problems FREE CHAPTER 2. Monitoring Oracle SOA Suite 3. Performance Testing 4. JVM Memory 5. JVM Garbage Collection Tuning 6. Platform Tuning 7. Data Sources and JMS 8. BPEL and BPMN Engine Tuning 9. Mediator and BAM 10. Rules and Human Workflow 11. SOA Application Design 12. High Performance Configuration Index

Using large pages in Linux


Using large pages allows the JVM and the operating system to manage memory more efficiently, having to page memory in and out less frequently.

Getting ready

You need to have Oracle SOA Suite 11g installed on a Linux server for this recipe, and to have enabled HugePages in the operating system. This recipe assumes that you are starting WebLogic using the startWebLogic or startManagedWebLogic scripts, and if you are using the node manager or some other mechanism, simply apply the startup parameter to the relevant place. You will need the file system permissions to edit the WebLogic start script for this recipe.

This recipe assumes you are using the Sun (HotSpot) JVM, and if you are using JRockit, the parameter is different (for more information on this, see the There's more... section at the end of this recipe).

How to do it…

To use large pages in Linux, perform the following steps:

  1. Check if HugePages support is enabled in the kernel:

    cat /proc/meminfo | grep Huge

    You are...

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